Villafane-Neriz v. FDIC ( 1996 )


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  • UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    No. 95-1492
    MIGUEL VILLAFA E-NERIZ,
    INSURANCE COMMISSIONER OF PUERTO RICO,
    Plaintiff - Appellant,
    v.
    FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION, ET AL.,
    Defendant - Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF PUERTO RICO
    [Hon. Juan M. P rez-Gim nez, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Torruella, Chief Judge,
    Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge,
    and Watson,* Senior Judge.
    Carlos J. Morales-Bauz , with whom Rossell -Rentas & Rabell-
    M ndez was on brief for appellant.
    J.   Scott  Watson,   Counsel,  Federal   Deposit  Insurance
    Corporation, with  whom Ann S. DuRoss,  Assistant General Counsel
    and  Richard J.  Osterman, Jr.,  Senior Counsel,  Federal Deposit
    Insurance Corporation, were on brief for appellee.
    February 2, 1996
    *  Of the United States  Court of International Trade, sitting by
    designation.
    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge.  This appeal seeks review of  a
    TORRUELLA, Chief Judge.
    decision  of the United States District Court for the District of
    Puerto Rico, which entered summary judgment on behalf of appellee
    the  Federal  Deposit  Insurance  Corporation  ("FDIC"),  in  its
    corporate capacity.  Appellant Miguel  Villafa e-Neriz, Insurance
    Commissioner of Puerto Rico (the "Commissioner") seeks to recover
    FDIC  deposit insurance for the $50,000 value of a certificate of
    deposit (the "Certificate" or the "CD") purchased by the Guaranty
    Insurance  Company  ("Guaranty"),  which   was  assigned  to  the
    Commissioner  simultaneously  with its  purchase.    The district
    court held that the FDIC properly relied on the books and records
    of an insolvent institution in making its determination  that the
    Commissioner  was not entitled to   deposit insurance.   The sole
    issue before us is  whether the district court erred  in granting
    summary judgment  against the Commissioner in  his action against
    the  FDIC in  its corporate  capacity.1   For the  reasons stated
    herein, we affirm.
    BACKGROUND
    BACKGROUND
    The facts of  this case  are undisputed.   On July  20,
    1983,  in  compliance  with  the  Puerto  Rico  Insurance  Code's
    statutory  deposit requirement,  26 L.P.R.A.      801-809 (1976),
    Guaranty purchased the  six-month CD from the Girod Trust Company
    1    In its  corporate capacity,  the  FDIC functions  as  a bank
    regulator  and  insurer of  bank deposits.    12 U.S.C.     1818,
    1821(a)  (1988 &  Supp. 1991).   The  Commissioner does  not seek
    review of that part of the district court decision that dismissed
    the complaint as against the FDIC as receiver of the former Girod
    Trust Company.
    -2-
    ("Girod" or the  "Bank") in the principal amount  of $50,000.  On
    the same day Guaranty  assigned and conveyed its interest  in the
    Certificate  to the Commissioner.   Girod was not  a party to the
    assignment.   Another  document was  executed on  the  same date,
    entitled "Requisition to the Bank."  This  document stated, inter
    alia, that Girod would  not release the funds represented  by the
    CD, "whether the principal value or  income thereof," without the
    Commissioner's authorization.   The Certificate was  itself given
    to, and remains with, the Commissioner.
    Less than three months after purchasing the Certificate
    from Girod, Guaranty executed a  loan agreement, unrelated to the
    CD,  pursuant  to  which it  borrowed  $600,000  from  Girod.   A
    promissory note for  that amount, payable to Girod, evidenced the
    loan, and was due on April 26, 1984.  On January 17, 1984, the CD
    became due, and  was "rolled over" -- extended for  a term of six
    additional months --  at Guaranty's  request.   In the  meantime,
    Guaranty had fallen behind on payments due to the  Bank under the
    $600,000  loan agreement.   On  July 16,  1984,  the CD  came due
    again.   Two  days after  its maturity,  on July  18, $50,000  in
    proceeds  from  the Certificate  was  credited toward  Guaranty's
    outstanding indebtedness under the $600,000 loan agreement.
    On August  16, 1984,  Girod was declared  insolvent and
    the  FDIC was  appointed  as receiver.    Four months  later,  on
    December  19,  1984,  Guaranty  also became  insolvent,  and  the
    Commissioner was appointed  its receiver  in turn.   As such,  on
    August 25, 1986, the Commissioner filed a proof of claim with the
    -3-
    FDIC, seeking payment  on the CD.  Having  received no payment on
    the claim, the Commissioner filed a complaint against the FDIC in
    the  Superior Court of  Puerto Rico on  May 22,  1991, seeking to
    recover  the proceeds of the CD.   The FDIC removed the action to
    federal  court pursuant to 12  U.S.C.   1819(b),  and the parties
    filed cross-motions  for summary judgment.  Without ruling on the
    motions, the district court requested submission of briefs on the
    application of  12 U.S.C.    1823(e).   The court then  held that
    that section  barred the Commissioner's reliance  upon either the
    Assignment or  the Requisition,  and ordered summary  judgment in
    favor of the FDIC.  On appeal in Villafa e-Neriz v. FDIC, 
    20 F.3d 35
     (1st Cir. 1994), this Court reversed the judgment of the lower
    court and  remanded the  case for further  proceedings consistent
    with  its opinion.    On February  7,  1995, the  district  court
    entered  summary  judgment  dismissing the  complaint.      It is
    undisputed  that the entire amount of the Certificate was set off
    against Guaranty's  indebtedness, that the CD  no longer appeared
    on the bank's books and records  at the time the bank failed, and
    that  the  Certificate  itself  remains  in  the   Commissioner's
    possession.
    DISCUSSION
    DISCUSSION
    A.  Standard of Review
    A.  Standard of Review
    This case centers on whether the FDIC, in its corporate
    capacity,  was  correct  in  determining  there  was  no  insured
    deposit. As the essential facts are not in  dispute, and all that
    is  before us is  a question of  law, our review  of the district
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    court's decision is de novo.  See, e.g., FDIC v. Keating, 
    12 F.3d 314
    , 316 (1st Cir. 1993).  This Circuit has not yet decided which
    standard  a  district  court   should  use  when  reviewing  FDIC
    insurance claim determinations.
    There  is  a  dispute  among  the  circuits as  to  the
    underlying  standard that should apply  to the review  of an FDIC
    insurance claim  determination.   The majority of  circuits which
    have addressed the  issue apply the deferential standard  set out
    in Section  706 of  the Administrative  Procedure Act  ("APA"), 5
    U.S.C.    701-706 (1994).  See, e.g., Metro County Title, Inc. v.
    FDIC, 
    13 F.3d 883
    , 886 (5th Cir.  1994) (direct petition to court
    of appeals for review  of FDIC determination); Nimon v.  RTC, 
    975 F.2d 240
     (1992) (direct  petition to court of appeals  for review
    of  Resolution Trust  Corporation determination);  In  re Collins
    Sec. Corp., 
    998 F.2d 551
    , 553 (8th Cir. 1993) (review of district
    court decision); Fletcher Village Condominium Ass'n. v. FDIC, 
    864 F. Supp. 259
    ,  263  (D. Mass.  1994).    The APA  mandates  that
    reviewing courts  set aside agency findings  that are "arbitrary,
    capricious,  an   abuse  of  discretion,  or   otherwise  not  in
    accordance  with  law."    5  U.S.C.    706(2)(A).    Under  this
    deferential standard a court would "review the evidence  anew and
    determine  whether the  administrative action  was arbitrary  and
    capricious."  First Nat'l Bank of Fayetteville v. Smith, 
    508 F.2d 1371
    ,  1374 (8th Cir. 1974),  cert. denied, 
    421 U.S. 930
     (1975);
    see, e.g., Hymel v. FDIC, 
    925 F.2d 881
    , 883 (5th Cir. 1991).
    However, a recent decision  by the D.C. Circuit creates
    -5-
    a second  option, holding that review of  FDIC determinations, to
    be  undertaken at  the district  court level,  should be  de novo
    rather than under the  deferential APA standard.  See  Callejo v.
    RTC, 
    17 F.3d 1497
     (D.C. Cir. 1994).  The Callejo  court based its
    rejection of  the APA on its reading of 12 U.S.C.   1821(f) (1988
    &  Supp. 1991),  which provides  for judicial review  of disputed
    deposit insurance  claims, and  its revision under  the Financial
    Institutions  Reform,  Recovery,  and Enforcement  Act  of  1989.
    Callejo, 
    17 F.3d at 1501
     (concluding that   1821(f)(3) "supplants
    the APA and sets up a different relationship between the agencies
    and the courts"); see  Pub. L. No. 101-73, 
    103 Stat. 183
     (1989);
    cf. Pennsylvania v. FDIC, 
    881 F. Supp. 979
    , 983 (E.D. Penn. 1995)
    (rejecting Callejo's  logic  but  nonetheless  applying  de  novo
    standard of review on other grounds).  This Circuit has expressly
    adopted  the aspect  of  the Callejo  decision  which holds  that
    initial jurisdiction to review claims for insurance benefits lies
    in  the district  court  rather than  in  the court  of  appeals.
    Massachusetts  v.  FDIC,  
    47 F.3d 456
    ,  458  (1st  Cir.  1995).
    However,  the  decision in  that  case was  limited  to Callejo's
    jurisdictional holding.  
    Id. at 460
    .  Thus, Massachusetts v. FDIC
    does not determine the district court's standard of review in the
    present case, and  our decision to  postpone the discussion  does
    not clash with our earlier decision.
    The  district  court  did  not explicitly  state  which
    standard  of  review it  was applying,  although  it did  make an
    isolated   reference,  midway   through   its  opinion,   to  the
    -6-
    "arbitrary, capricious and  contrary to law"  standard.  We  need
    not  determine  which standard  the  district  court should  have
    applied  at this time,  since we agree  with the  FDIC that under
    either  the APA "arbitrary and capricious" or the Callejo de novo
    standard, the  district  court's decision  is correct.   Thus  we
    postpone discussion regarding  the applicable standard  of review
    in light of Callejo for another day.
    B.  Was this an insured deposit?
    B.  Was this an insured deposit?
    At  the core  of the  parties' dispute  is whether  the
    Commissioner  was  entitled to  deposit  insurance.   That  issue
    depends on whether  there was an insured  deposit at the time  of
    Girod's failure, a question  which in turn hinges on  whether and
    when erroneous  bank records  are conclusive.   It is  undisputed
    that the Bank's account records did not disclose the existence of
    an  account on  the  date Girod  failed,  and that  the  original
    Certificate is in  the possession  of the  Commissioner, and  has
    been since July 1983.  The FDIC argues that under its regulations
    and the applicable case law, it is justified in relying solely on
    the failed Bank's account records, so that its refusal to provide
    insurance  was  proper.   The  Commissioner  counters that  under
    Puerto  Rico  law  the FDIC  should  have  known  the setoff  was
    improper,  because   the  Certificate  was  not   in  the  bank's
    possession.   Because  we  agree with  the  FDIC, we  affirm  the
    decision of the court below.
    In  the Federal  Deposit  Insurance Act,  12 U.S.C.
    1811-1831(d) (1982)  (as amended), Congress  defined "deposit" to
    -7-
    mean "the unpaid balance  of money or its equivalent  received or
    held by  a bank  or savings  association in  the usual course  of
    business and  for  which it  has given  or is  obligated to  give
    credit,  either conditionally or unconditionally,  . . . or which
    is evidenced by  its certificate of deposit . . . ."  12 U.S.C.
    1813(l)(1) (Supp. 1995).  "Insured deposit" is defined in turn as
    "the net amount due to  any depositor for deposits in  an insured
    depository institution  as determined under sections  1817(i) and
    1821(a) of this  title."  12  U.S.C.   1813(m)(1)  (1988 &  Supp.
    1991).
    The  FDIC   contends  that  it  is   entitled  to  rely
    exclusively  on the account records of  the failed institution --
    and so it did  not have to look further afield  to track down the
    Certificate.  Our analysis  of the FDIC regulations, the  body of
    case law,  and the  policy concerns underlying  these regulations
    leads  us  to agree.   First,  the FDIC  regulations, promulgated
    under congressional authorization, Abdulla  Fouad & Sons v. FDIC,
    
    898 F.2d 482
    , 484 (5th  Cir. 1990), themselves  provide that the
    amount of  an insured  deposit at  the closing  of a  failed bank
    shall be  "the balance of principal  and interest unconditionally
    credited to the deposit account as  of the date of default of the
    insured depository institution."  12 C.F.R.   330.3(i)(1) (1995).
    Indeed, the regulations specify that, while ownership under state
    law  is  one prerequisite  for  insurance  coverage, the  deposit
    account records are controlling:
    Deposit  insurance  coverage  is  also  a
    function of the  deposit account  records
    -8-
    of the insured depository institution, of
    recordkeeping requirements,  and of other
    provisions  of this  part, which,  in the
    interest  of  uniform national  rules for
    deposit    insurance     coverage,    are
    controlling  for purposes  of determining
    deposit insurance coverage.
    12  C.F.R.     330.3(h)  (including  regulatory  exceptions   not
    relevant here).  Reviewing  courts have treated these regulations
    implementing  and interpreting  the statutory  provisions dealing
    with deposit  insurance  with  some  deference.2    See  FDIC  v.
    Philadelphia Gear Corp., 
    476 U.S. 426
    , 437-38 (1986); see, e.g.,
    Raine v.  Reed, 
    14 F.3d 280
    , 283  (5th Cir. 1994);  Collins, 998
    F.2d at 555; cf. Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense
    Council,  Inc.,  
    467 U.S. 837
    ,  842-44  (establishing  doctrine
    treating  agency's  view of  a  statute with  deference  when the
    statute is ambiguous), reh'g denied, 
    468 U.S. 1227
     (1984).
    Second, a series of  policy considerations underlie the
    FDIC's practice of  relying on  the books and  records in  making
    deposit  insurance  determinations.   In purchase  and assumption
    transactions,3  the  FDIC  often  must  make  its  determinations
    2    The  Commissioner asks  us  to  note  that "deposit  account
    records"  are defined  to  include certificates  of deposits  and
    "other books and records of the insured depository institution, .
    . . which relate to the insured depository  institution's deposit
    taking  function."  12 C.F.R.    330.1(d) (1995).   This language
    proves unhelpful, however,  since it is undisputed that there was
    no Certificate among the  Bank's records at the time  of failure.
    Had the  Certificate  remained in  the records,  this case  would
    likely not have arisen.
    3   A  purchase and  assumption transaction  occurs when,  in its
    capacity  as  receiver, the  FDIC sells  a failed  bank's healthy
    assets to a purchasing  bank in exchange for that  bank's promise
    to pay the  depositors of  the failed bank.   FDIC-receiver  next
    sells the  'bad'  assets  to itself  as  FDIC-corporate.    FDIC-
    -9-
    overnight.  See Raine, 
    14 F.3d at 283
     ("We will not undermine the
    speed and efficiency of bank  takeovers by imposing a requirement
    upon the FDIC  to locate  and evaluate every  possible avenue  of
    disputed  liability  in implementing  the  takeover  of a  failed
    bank."); McCloud v. FDIC, 
    853 F. Supp. 556
    , 559 (D. Mass. 1994).
    Making  quick determinations both facilitates the public's access
    to its savings, Abdulla Fouad, 
    898 F.2d at 485
    , and maintains the
    going concern  value of the failed  bank, Raine, 
    14 F.3d at 283
    .
    Finally,  the  regulations  also avoid  fraudulent  increases  in
    insurance coverage  by preventing the creation  of separate trust
    accounts after default has occurred.  See Baskes v. FSLIC, 
    649 F. Supp. 1358
    , 1360 (N.D. Ill. 1986).
    Third,  there is "a well-grounded history of permitting
    the FDIC  to  rely exclusively  on the  books and  records of  an
    insolvent institution  in effectuating the takeover  of banks and
    in  making the  many deposit  insurance determinations  which are
    necessary to that task."  Raine, 
    14 F.3d at 283
    ; see McCloud, 
    853 F. Supp. at 559
      (describing the "seemingly solid phalanx  of law
    establishing the  conclusiveness of bank  account records");  see
    also  Abdulla Fouad,  
    898 F.2d at 484
      (providing statutory  and
    regulatory basis  for FDIC reliance on  deposit account records).
    receiver  uses the money received  to pay the  purchasing bank to
    make  up  the difference  between  what the  purchasing  bank was
    willing to pay for  the good assets and what  it must pay out  to
    the  failed  bank's depositors.    FDIC-corporate  then tries  to
    collect  on  the  bad  assets.    This  purchase  and  assumption
    generally  needs  to be  executed  with  speed, often  overnight.
    Timberland  Design, Inc. v. First  Serv. Bank For  Sav., 
    932 F.2d 46
    , 48 (1st Cir. 1991).
    -10-
    This  reliance on  the  books  and  records  draws  on  the  FDIC
    regulations:    the  "FDIC's  longstanding  practice  of  looking
    primarily  at  the  failed  bank's  deposit  account  records  in
    determining   insurance   claims   is   clearly   a   permissible
    interpretation of  [its] statutory mandates."   Collins, 998 F.3d
    at 554.  Indeed, the case law the FDIC cites states that a bank's
    closing  is  "the seminal  point"  of  the FDIC's  determination.
    "That event not  only trigger[s] the liquidation process,  but it
    also  cast[s] in  stone the  relationship of  [plaintiff] to  the
    bank."  FDIC  v. McKnight, 
    769 F.2d 658
    , 661 (1985), cert. denied
    sub  nom.,  All Souls  Episcopal Church  v.  FDIC, 
    475 U.S. 1010
    (1986).
    In fact, the case law supports the FDIC's dependence on
    the  books and records  of the Bank  at the time  of failure even
    though  the   balance  was  a  result   of  alleged  unauthorized
    activity.4  See Abdulla  Fouad, 
    898 F.2d at 484-85
      (finding that
    plaintiff's  position that  the  FDIC should  have searched  bank
    credit  files  and other  records  before  denying a  claim  goes
    against  statutory and  regulatory authority);  Fletcher Village,
    4  This circuit has not previously reached the issue of whether a
    bank's correctly  recorded but unauthorized activity precludes an
    insurance claim.  See  FDIC v. Fedders Air Conditioning,  
    35 F.3d 18
    , 23 (1st  Cir. 1994).   Indeed,  in the  present case's  first
    appearance  before  this  court,  we noted  we  had  not  decided
    "whether or  to what  extent we would  be willing  to follow  the
    Eighth Circuit's holding in In re Collins."  Villafa e-Neriz,  
    20 F.3d at
    40 n.6.   In  affirming  the district  court's decision
    today, we  adopt much of  the logic  of the Collins  decision, as
    well as the  decisions of  the district  court for  Massachusetts
    which have decided similar  cases.  See Fletcher Village,  
    864 F. Supp. at 265
     (adopting the reasoning of Collins); McCloud, 
    853 F. Supp. at 559
    .
    -11-
    
    864 F. Supp. at 265
     ("To hold the FDIC liable for the errors and
    omissions  inherent in  almost  any  routine banking  transaction
    would divert the  FDIC from  its core mission  of protecting  the
    banking  system  from  an  ultimate  catastrophe.").    In  their
    analysis, "[t]hese  cases reflect the severe  tension between two
    values:   the  legitimate expectations  of the depositor  and the
    regulator's desire to rely upon existing  records to expedite the
    handling of bank emergencies."  Fedders Air Conditioning, 
    35 F.3d at 23
    .
    The Eighth Circuit's analysis in  the factually similar
    In re Collins  proves illustrative.  In  that case, as here,  the
    purchaser  of a  certificate  assigned the  proceeds  to a  third
    party,  Collins.    The  proceeds,  however,  were  paid  to  the
    purchaser's account,  and  the CD  account was  reflected on  the
    institution's account  records as closed.   Collins, 998  F.2d at
    552-53.  The trustee  for the bankrupt Collins sought  to recover
    from  the institution for paying  out the CD  account despite the
    assignment,   alleging  negligence   and   breach  of   contract.
    Following the institution's insolvency, the FDIC in its corporate
    capacity   denied  deposit  insurance,  and  the  trustee  sought
    judicial review of its denial.  Id. at 553.  The court of appeals
    held that the  FDIC properly relied on  the books and records  of
    the failed institution to deny deposit insurance, noting that the
    institution's "mistaken payment  may not have affected  Collins's
    rights  against  the  bank, but  it  did  extinguish the  insured
    amount."   Id.  at 554.   In short,  it reasoned  that "[d]eposit
    -12-
    insurance  protects  depositors  from  loss  due  to  the  bank's
    insolvency, not  loss from  the bank's  pre-insolvency mistakes."
    Id. at 555.  We find the Eighth Circuit's reasoning convincing in
    the present case as well.
    The  Commissioner  seeks  to  differentiate  Collins on
    several bases.  First, he argues that the mistake  in Collins was
    a simple bank error,  id. at 552-53, while the  "cancellation" in
    the current case is not a  simple mistake, but rather was illegal
    on its face.   We do not find the distinction  relevant.  In both
    cases,  the  account was  cancelled  without regard  to  the CD's
    assignment,  and  the  bank's   records  had  not  reflected  the
    assignment.  Second, he finds it significant that the decision in
    Collins  noted  not only  that  the account  in  controversy been
    closed  at least  a  full  year  before  the  bank  was  declared
    insolvent,  but also that the insolvent bank had not paid deposit
    insurance premiums  for the account.   See id. at 553-54.   Here,
    the Commissioner contests, Girod paid  deposit insurance premiums
    on the CD account, which  was cancelled less than a  month before
    the  bank was  taken  over  and a  few  days  after the  Treasury
    Department of Puerto Rico conducted the investigation that led to
    the  bank's  closing.    Again,  we  are  not  convinced  of  the
    distinction.  In  Collins, the court's determination was based on
    the fact that the  records of a failed bank indicated the amounts
    that  were insured, and the accounts for which the FDIC collected
    deposit  insurance premiums.  The length of time that the account
    was  closed, or the insurance  premiums unpaid, was  not the key:
    -13-
    the crucial factor was the reasonableness of the FDIC reliance on
    the  records.  See id. at 554.  Collins noted that the CD account
    was  not an  insured deposit  for which  premiums were  paid, and
    found that Collins'  trustee had "confus[ed] the right to recover
    from  the bank  with  the  right  to  withdraw  from  an  insured
    account."  Id.
    Raine  v. Reed  offers another  example of  an analysis
    upholding  the FDIC's exclusive reliance on the books and records
    of  a failed  institution.   Raine was  a victim  of unauthorized
    withdrawals from automatic teller machines, who notified her bank
    of the  withdrawals and  sought to  have her  account re-credited
    pursuant to the Electronic Funds Transfer Act ("EFTA"), 15 U.S.C.
    1693-1693r.   Raine, 
    14 F.3d at 281-82
    .   At the time  of its
    failure, the  bank had not provisionally  re-credited the account
    pending  final   resolution  of  her  request,   as  required  by
    regulations  implementing  the EFTA.    Raine  contended she  was
    entitled  to deposit insurance on  the basis that  she should not
    suffer because of the bank's mistakes.  
    Id. at 282
    .  However, the
    Fifth Circuit found that
    [t]he  disputed  amount  was  simply  not
    credited   to   her   account   at   all,
    conditionally  or  otherwise.   Thus, the
    account  cannot  be  covered  by  deposit
    insurance  because  no  credit   for  the
    amounts  withdrawn  was  entered  on  the
    bank's books at the time of failure.
    
    Id. at 283
    .  The court relied  on the "well-grounded history" of
    allowing   the  FDIC   to  rely   exclusively  on   an  insolvent
    institution's books and  records, even where the bank  itself has
    -14-
    committed a  mistake, as well as the  policy rationales discussed
    above, in upholding the FDIC's use of the books and records.  
    Id.
    According to the court, "[t]he regulations are clear  and simple,
    either the amount is credited to the account, in which case it is
    covered by deposit insurance, or the  amount is not on the books,
    in which case  it becomes a general liability of  the bank."  
    Id. at 284
    .
    The Commissioner offers no authority  contradicting our
    analysis of the FDIC regulations, policy considerations, and case
    law  supporting the use of  the failed bank's  records.  Instead,
    the  Commissioner  counters  with  two arguments.      First,  he
    contends that even if the FDIC relied on Girod's existing records
    at the time of its failure in 1984, it should have concluded that
    the   Certificate  had   not  been   properly  cancelled.     The
    Commissioner  relies on 7 L.P.R.A.    3 (1981),  which states, in
    pertinent part, that
    [t]he  term  "deposit certificate"  shall
    mean any deposit which has been evidenced
    by   a   receipt  or   written  agreement
    containing  the  term   for  which   such
    deposit  has been  made  and  which  also
    requires presentation at the bank for its
    collection.
    (emphasis added).   He concludes  from this  language that  since
    Puerto  Rico law mandates that  the original of  a certificate of
    deposit be presented to the bank for collection, an FDIC official
    reviewing Girod's records  regarding the CD's "cancellation"  had
    to be alerted that the Certificate was still  valid by the simple
    fact that the original was not contained in the customer profile.
    -15-
    By failing to do so, the Commissioner contends, the FDIC did  not
    give  the  proper  weight  to these  Puerto  Rican  recordkeeping
    requirements.
    We  do not find this argument convincing.  On its face,
    the  statute  sets  out  the requirements  for  presentation  for
    collection, which  is not at  issue here.  We  are concerned with
    what records  should remain in the  bank after a  setoff, and the
    language is silent on this point.  The sole case the Commissioner
    cites to support its argument that the statute should be  read to
    require  that the original of a certificate must be presented for
    setoff, Walla Corp.  v. Banco Commercial de  Mayaguez, 
    114 D.P.R. 216
      (1983)   (holding  that  where   bank  set  off   loan  with
    certificates  effectively  assigned to  third  party, bank  could
    compensate the CDs with the  loans debtor had with it), does  not
    mention  the statute.  We could find no case law on point.  Given
    the plain meaning of the statute,  and the absence of evidence to
    support  the Commissioner's reading of the statute, we reject his
    position.
    The  Commissioner's  second   argument  relies  on   an
    exception to  the general rule that the  records of a failed Bank
    are  conclusive.  That exception states  that "records that would
    otherwise be conclusive evidence  may be attacked as fraudulent."
    Collins, 998  F.2d at  555; see, e.g.,  Jones v.  FDIC, 
    748 F.2d 1400
    , 1405 (10th  Cir. 1984); McCloud, 
    853 F. Supp. at 559
    .  The
    Commissioner argues to  this court  that there was  fraud in  the
    transaction  assigning  the  Certificate,  and  therefore  he  is
    -16-
    entitled to attack the conclusiveness of Girod's records.
    However,  we  refuse  to  consider  the  Commissioner's
    argument, since he  raises it for the first time  on appeal.5  It
    is well established that this court will not consider an argument
    presented for  the first time on  appeal.  See Clauson  v. Smith,
    
    823 F.2d 660
    ,  666 (1st  Cir. 1987)  (collecting cases).   While
    exceptions to this  rule exist, they  apply only "'in  horrendous
    cases  where  a  gross  miscarriage  of  justice  would  occur,'"
    Johnston v. Holiday Inns, Inc., 
    595 F.2d 890
    , 894 (1st Cir. 1979)
    (quoting  Newark Morning  Ledger Co. v.  United States,  
    539 F.2d 929
    , 932 (3d Cir. 1976)), and this is not  such a case.  That the
    Commissioner's argument involves no new facts, just a new theory,
    is irrelevant.   See Ondine  Shipping Corp. v.  Cataldo, 
    24 F.3d 353
    , 355 (1st Cir. 1994) ("This assertion is neither original nor
    persuasive.").
    Therefore,  since   we  find  that  under   either  the
    5   We note in passing that  the Commissioner argues on the basis
    of fraud in  the transaction underlying the  records, since there
    is  no  question  that  the  records  themselves  were  accurate.
    However,  the  cases the  Commissioner seeks  to  rely on  in his
    argument -- McCloud, Abdulla Fouad, and Collins -- all discuss an
    exemption based on fraud in a bank's recordkeeping.  See Collins,
    998 F.2d at 556  (noting that there was "no  allegation of fraud"
    where the bank's records "accurately reflected payout of $100,000
    to  the  wrong  party.");  Abdulla  Fouad,  
    898 F.2d at 485-86
    (refusing to extend  exception to include  proof directed to  the
    deposit  account  recording);  McCloud,   
    853 F. Supp. at 560
    (concluding  that, where there  was evidence that  the records of
    deposits were altered during the course of fraudulent conduct  by
    the bank president, "it was arbitrary, capricious and contrary to
    law for the agency to consider the customer profile as of the day
    of  the bank's default as conclusive"  (footnote omitted)).  Thus
    we question whether the Commissioner would have met with success,
    even if he had both  raised this argument in the court  below and
    demonstrated that there was fraud in the transaction.
    -17-
    arbitrary  and capricious  standard or a  more demanding  de novo
    review the FDIC was correct in relying solely on Girod's records,
    and  reject the  Commissioner's  arguments based  on Puerto  Rico
    banking  law and fraud, we affirm the district court's holding on
    these issues.
    C.  Application of the McCarran-Ferguson Act
    C.  Application of the McCarran-Ferguson Act
    The Commissioner  raises one final argument against the
    FDIC's  insurance determinations,  based on  Section 2(b)  of the
    McCarran-Ferguson  Act.  
    59 Stat. 33
    , 34 (1945),  as amended, 15
    U.S.C.   1012(b).  Section 2(b) states, in pertinent part:
    No Act of Congress shall be  construed to
    invalidate, impair, or supersede  any law
    enacted by  any State for  the purpose of
    regulating the business of  insurance, or
    which  imposes  a fee  or  tax upon  such
    business,  unless  such Act  specifically
    relates  to  the  business  of  insurance
    . . . .
    15  U.S.C.    1012(b) (1994).   This  statute creates "a  form of
    inverse  preemption,  letting  state  law  prevail  over  general
    federal rules--those  that do  not 'specifically relate[]  to the
    business of insurance.'"  NAACP v. American Family Mut. Ins. Co.,
    
    978 F.2d 287
    , 293  (7th Cir. 1992), cert.  denied,     U.S.    ,
    
    113 S. Ct. 2335
    , 
    124 L.Ed.2d 247
     (1993); see United States Dep't
    of the  Treasury v. Fabe,      U.S.     ,    , 
    113 S. Ct. 2202
    ,
    2211, 
    124 L.Ed.2d 449
     (1993)  (noting that the  Act "transformed
    the  legal   landscape  by   overturning  the  normal   rules  of
    preemption.").   As the Supreme Court  has explained, "'Congress'
    purpose  was broadly to give  support to the  existing and future
    state  systems   for  regulating  and  taxing   the  business  of
    -18-
    insurance.'"  Fabe, 
    113 S. Ct. at 2207
     (quoting  Prudential Ins.
    Co.  v. Benjamin, 
    328 U.S. 408
    , 429  (1946)).  Indeed, the quoted
    language  of Section 2(b) "impos[es] what is, in effect, a clear-
    statement rule, a rule  that state laws enacted 'for  the purpose
    of  regulating  the  business  of  insurance'  do  not  yield  to
    conflicting   federal   statutes   unless   a   federal   statute
    specifically requires otherwise."  Id. at 2211.
    The Commissioner seizes on Section 2(b) to contend that
    the district  court's decision  "renders meaningless"  the Puerto
    Rico Insurance Code provisions requiring that insurance companies
    make  statutory deposits.  See  26 L.P.R.A.     801-809.  Because
    Guaranty assigned the CD  to the Commissioner in order  to comply
    with this  statute, the Commissioner concludes  that the district
    court's  decision  upholding  the   FDIC's  refusal  of   deposit
    insurance  impairs the  Commissioner's  ability  to regulate  the
    business  of insurance  in  Puerto Rico,  and therefore  violates
    Section  2(b).     The  decision,   the  Commissioner   contends,
    particularly impairs "obtaining  eligible deposits from insurance
    companies to comply with the statutory deposit requirement of the
    Insurance Code, whose ultimate aim is to protect policyholders in
    case of the insurer's insolvency."  (Appellant's Brief, at 20).
    The Supreme Court  has set out the factors required for
    a  federal  statute to  fall  within  the McCarran-Ferguson  Act.
    First,  the  federal   statute  must   "invalidate,  impair,   or
    supersede" the state act.   Second, the federal statute  must not
    "specifically relat[e]  to the business of  insurance."  Finally,
    -19-
    the  state law  must  have  been  enacted  "for  the  purpose  of
    regulating the business of insurance."  Fabe, 
    113 S. Ct. at 2208
    .
    We need go  no further than the first factor  in our analysis, as
    the Commissioner's  argument that  the application of  the Puerto
    Rico Insurance Code is impaired fails.
    The  Supreme  Court  faced  the  question  of  when  an
    "impairment" occurs in SEC  v. National Sec., Inc., 
    393 U.S. 453
    (1969).  In that case, the SEC sought to unwind the merger of two
    insurance  companies which  had  been approved  by  the state  of
    Arizona, on the basis that the merger was obtained through use of
    fraudulent misrepresentations.    Arizona argued  that the  SEC's
    action  would violate  the  McCarran-Ferguson Act.   The  Supreme
    Court,  finding  that the  essential  question  was "whether  the
    McCarran-Ferguson  Act  bars a  federal  remedy  which affects  a
    matter  subject  to  state  insurance regulation,"  
    id. at 462
    ,
    disagreed.
    The gravamen  of  the complaint  was  the
    misrepresentation,  not the merger. . . .
    Nevertheless, [the state] contend[s] that
    any  attempt to  interfere with  a merger
    approved  by  state  insurance  officials
    would "invalidate,  impair, or supersede"
    the  state  insurance laws  .  .  . .  We
    cannot    accept   this    overly   broad
    restriction on federal power.
    It  is clear that  any "impairment" in
    this case is a most indirect one.
    
    Id. at 462-63
    .  The courts have relied on this logic to conclude
    that   "application  of a  federal law  [will] be  precluded only
    where  the federal  law expressly  prohibit[s] acts  permitted by
    state law, or vice  versa."  Merchants Home Delivery  Serv., Inc.
    -20-
    v. Frank  B. Hall  &  Co., 
    50 F.3d 1486
    ,  1492  (9th Cir.  1995)
    (holding that application of a  federal law which prohibited acts
    also  prohibited  by  state  insurance law  did  not  invalidate,
    impair,   or  supersede  state   law,  despite   their  differing
    remedies),  cert. denied  sub nom.,  Prometheus Funding  Corp. v.
    Merchants Home Delivery  Serv., Inc.,      U.S.    ,  
    116 S. Ct. 418
    ,     L.Ed.2d      (1995); see American Family Mut.  Ins. Co.,
    
    978 F.2d at 296-97
      (drawing  on  analogies  to the  principles
    governing federal preemption of state law).
    Application  of this  "direct  conflict"  test  quickly
    defeats the  Commissioner's argument.   In short, nothing  in the
    district  court opinion -- or the FDIC regulations -- impairs the
    Commissioner's authority  or  ability  to  obtain  deposits  from
    insurance  companies  to  comply   with  the  statutory   deposit
    requirement.   The  opinion and  regulations merely set  out what
    records the FDIC may rely on  in making insurance determinations.
    The  Commissioner's loss is the product of events, not a conflict
    between federal and Commonwealth  statutes.  In the absence  of a
    direct  prohibition, we  refuse to  hold that  there has  been an
    impairment merely because  in this circumstance a  CD assigned to
    the  Commissioner was  set  off against  the insurance  company's
    indebtedness.  Cf. Merchants Home Delivery, 
    50 F.3d at 1492
     ("The
    language of   2(b) is inconsistent with a congressional intent to
    allow states to preempt the field of insurance regulation.").
    CONCLUSION
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, we affirm.
    affirm.
    -21-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 95-1492

Filed Date: 2/2/1996

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 12/21/2014

Authorities (28)

alfred-m-johnston-individually-alfred-m-johnston-trustee-and-daniel , 595 F.2d 890 ( 1979 )

merchants-home-delivery-service-inc-a-california-corporation-v-frank-b , 50 F.3d 1486 ( 1995 )

Prudential Insurance v. Benjamin , 66 S. Ct. 1142 ( 1946 )

Raine v. Reed , 14 F.3d 280 ( 1994 )

Federal Deposit Insurance v. Philadelphia Gear Corp. , 106 S. Ct. 1931 ( 1986 )

United States Department of Treasury v. Fabe , 113 S. Ct. 2202 ( 1993 )

Metro County Title, Inc. v. Federal Deposit Insurance , 13 F.3d 883 ( 1994 )

Ondine Shipping Corp. v. Cataldo , 24 F.3d 353 ( 1994 )

Commonwealth of Massachusetts v. Federal Deposit Insurance ... , 47 F.3d 456 ( 1995 )

Charles Clauson v. Robert D. Smith , 823 F.2d 660 ( 1987 )

The National Association for the Advancement of Colored ... , 978 F.2d 287 ( 1992 )

federal-deposit-insurance-corporation-and-deposit-insurance-national-bank , 769 F.2d 658 ( 1985 )

patrick-a-hymel-clu-and-associates-inc-patrick-a-hymel-as-trustee , 925 F.2d 881 ( 1991 )

Chevron U. S. A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, ... , 104 S. Ct. 2778 ( 1984 )

Newark Morning Ledger Company, a Corporation of the State ... , 539 F.2d 929 ( 1976 )

Timberland Design, Inc. And William C. Barnsley v. First ... , 932 F.2d 46 ( 1991 )

Federal Deposit Insurance v. Fedders Air Conditioning, USA, ... , 35 F.3d 18 ( 1994 )

Villafane-Neriz v. Federal Deposit Insurance , 20 F.3d 35 ( 1994 )

Eli B. Jones, of the Estate of Jesse L. Bobo, Deceased v. ... , 748 F.2d 1400 ( 1984 )

McCloud v. Federal Deposit Insurance , 853 F. Supp. 556 ( 1994 )

View All Authorities »